Edward Eastman

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Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byJoseph Jackson
Preceded byLeonard P. Crary
Succeeded byDudley Blodget (WinnebagoWaupaca)
Edward Eastman
Bust view of bearded man wearing a black jacket, white shirt and collar, black bow tie
Photo of Edward Eastman, from a visiting card circa 1867
1st Mayor of Oshkosh, Wisconsin
In office
April 1853  April 1854
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byJoseph Jackson
Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly
from the Winnebago County district
In office
January 6, 1851  January 5, 1852
Preceded byLeonard P. Crary
Succeeded byDudley Blodget (WinnebagoWaupaca)
Personal details
Born(1806-02-22)February 22, 1806
DiedFebruary 23, 1870(1870-02-23) (aged 64)
Resting placeRiverside Cemetery, Oshkosh
Party
Spouses
  • Sarah G. Tracy
    (m. 1838; died 1840)
  • Catherine Peckham Granger
    (m. 18411870)
Children6
OccupationMerchant

Edward Eastman (February 22, 1806  February 23, 1870) was an American merchant, politician, and pioneer settler of Oshkosh, Wisconsin. He was active in civic and territorial affairs, and known as a Democrat and Free Soiler. In 1847 he was one of a partnership approved by the territorial legislature to build the first bridge across the Fox River in Oshkosh.

After the city was incorporated in 1853, Eastman was elected as the first mayor of Oshkosh. He also served several years before and after that by appointment as its postmaster. In 1850 he was elected and served a single one-year term in the Wisconsin State Assembly as a Free Soil Party member.[1]

After his political career, he became a bookseller in Oshkosh. In the mid-1850s, he was named to the board of directors of two railroads formed in Oshkosh: the Oshkosh & Portage City, and the Winnebago railroads.

Edward Eastman was born February 22, 1806, in Randolph, Vermont, son of Tilton and Experience (Smith) Eastman, both descended from English ancestors of the colonial period. He was college educated (at an Episcopal seminary, which may explain his nickname of "Deacon"). He worked on his father's farm and helped put two younger brothers through college as well. One of these brothers, George B., would later become a minister in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin.[2]

Eastman married Sarah Tracey, and they had a son George. Sarah died soon after their child's birth. The young widower married again on June 3, 1841, to Catharine Granger (born in 1824). The couple would eventually have four children together.

Move to Wisconsin

In the mid-19th century, following the construction of the Erie Canal in New York, migration increased from New England and New York to the Great Lakes area of the Midwest. The Eastman family were among those moving to Wisconsin Territory in 1846. Eastman spent some time in Dodge County before settling in Oshkosh later that year.

In the town of Oshkosh, Eastman began dealing in general merchandise, and for many years he was in partnership with L. M. Miller. He was appointed US postmaster of Oshkosh by the administration of Democratic President James K. Polk in that same year, serving until 1849 in the patronage position. The administration and patronage appointments changed after election in 1848 of Whig Zachary Taylor as President of the United States.

In February 1847, Eastman, Miller and other locals were authorized by the Wisconsin territorial legislature to form a company to build a bridge across the Fox River "at Miller's Ferry" in Oshkosh.[3] On January 12, 1848, Eastman was appointed as the first clerk of court for the Winnebago County circuit court.[4]

Elected office

With the breakdown of the Second Party System in American politics, Eastman (who had been a Democrat in Vermont and Wisconsin Territory) became active in the "Union Democratic Party" movement.[5] It eventually merged with the Free Soil Party.

In 1850, he was elected to the Winnebago County seat in the Wisconsin Assembly, succeeding Democrat Leonard P. Crary, as a Free Soiler. (The party affiliation was still fluid: at least one Democratic newspaper described him as a Democrat, and listed him on their Democratic ticket with former Governor James Duane Doty, who was running as an Independent Democrat.)[6] In the 1851 election Dudley Blodget, a Whig, succeeded Eastman in this legislative district. (Crary and Blodget were both also from the city of Oshkosh.)

In 1853, the new Democratic President Franklin Pierce appointed Eastman again as US Postmaster of Oshkosh. Also in 1853, Eastman supported the incorporation of the City of Oshkosh, formerly part of the Town of Oshkosh. He was elected as the first mayor of the new city (on a combined Democratic and Independent ticket). In later years Eastman was elected as an alderman to the city council. In 1856, he lost the mayoral election (running as a Democrat) by one vote, 318 votes to the winning 319 votes for Thomas A. Follett.[7]

Later life

See also

References

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